East Midlands landlords not paying tax on rental properties on the rise

The number of buy-to-let landlords in Nottingham (NG postcode area) admitting to not paying tax on their rental income has risen by 245% over the past year according to research conducted by accountancy firm UHY Hacker Young.

On a list of the highest concentration areas across the UK of buy-to-let landlords admitting to rental income tax avoidance, Nottingham is ranked third, following Leicester at second and Birmingham in first place.

The figures show that the total number of landlords in Nottingham admitting to tax avoidance on rental income is up to 324 in 2018/19 from 94 in 2017/18.

Simon Browning, partner in charge of UHY’s Nottingham office, said: “Nottingham’s buy-to-let market has continued to soar in recent years, making it a popular choice for investors with the rental yields achieved some of the highest in the country.

“However, these figures show that HMRC sees the buy-to-let market as a source of hundreds of millions of pounds of unpaid tax. The amounts collected just from landlords coming in from the cold suggests they may not be too far wrong with those estimates.

“Mounting pressure on buy-to-let landlords from HMRC’s Let Property Campaign has driven this sharp increase. The Let Property Campaign aggressively mailshots buy-to-let landlords that are suspected of avoiding paying tax on their rental income warning them of the consequences of tax evasion.

“Buy-to-let landlords have been prosecuted and jailed both for under declaring rental income and for failing to pay CGT on the sale of buy-to-let properties. Considering the risks of big fines and criminal prosecutions landlords are doing the right thing by coming forward to HMRC and declaring unpaid taxes.

“While establishing and prosecuting a tax fraud involves a lot of hard work by HMRC they’ve made it clear that this is a route they will go down. The paper trail that exists with most property lettings makes it relatively simple for HMRC to show when tax is not being paid.”

Top ten areas in the UK with the highest number of landlords admitting to avoiding tax on rental income

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